Up First from NPR - Lebanon-Israel Border Escalation, Southern Baptist Convention, Siri's AI Upgrade
Episode Date: June 11, 2024Cross border attacks between Israel and Lebanon are intensifying as Secretary of State Antony Blinken meets with Israeli leaders to push for a ceasefire deal in Gaza. The country's largest Protestant ...group gathers for its annual meeting. The Southern Baptist convention will vote on a number of key issues including banning women pastors and IVF fertility among other issues churches are facing. And, Siri is getting an AI upgrade after Apple announced a deal with ChatGPT.Want more comprehensive analysis of the most important news of the day, plus a little fun? Subscribe to the Up First newsletter.Today's episode of Up First was edited by Hannah Bloch, Cheryl Corely, Gabriel Spitzer, Mohamad ElBardicy and Alice Woelfle. It was produced by Ziad Buchh, Ben Abrams and Lindsay Totty. Our technical director is Zac Coleman, with engineering support from Carleigh Strange.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Thousands have been displaced as cross-border attacks between Israel and Lebanon intensify.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken is in Tel Aviv.
Can a U.S.-backed ceasefire deal bring calm to fighting on two fronts?
I'm Michelle Martin, that's Rob Schmitz, and this is Up First from NPR News.
The annual Southern Baptist Convention is starting today,
and once again, cultural and political issues are on the agenda.
Some churches are straightforwardly telling us that they are basically out of sync
with the Southern Baptist Convention on the issue of women preaching.
Also on the agenda, a possible ban on IVF
and the denomination's handling of clergy sex abuse allegations.
And Siri is about to get an AI upgrade.
What changes are coming to Apple's virtual assistant?
Stay with us.
We'll give you the news you need to start your day.
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It's been more than eight months of Israel's war in Gaza after the surprise Hamas attack on October 7th.
But Israel has also been fighting on another front, exchanging frequent fire across the Lebanese border with Hezbollah.
Now that low-level conflict is becoming more intense,
and many Israelis are eyeing the possibility of a full-on war against the Iranian-backed group.
NPR's Kat Lonsdorff was out near the border
yesterday and joins us now from Haifa. Good morning, Kat.
Hey, Rob.
So, Kat, what did you see near the border?
Yeah, so my team and I started in a town called Kirat Shmona. It's mostly a ghost town right now.
You know, all the shops are closed. There's no cars on the road. Apartment buildings are empty.
It's a town that's gotten many direct hits from Hezbollah in the past few months,
but there are still some people living there.
You know, yesterday we had just arrived and a man walked up to us and started talking to us,
and suddenly there was a big explosion.
And just to warn listeners, we're going to play a sound of that here.
And, you know, you can hear the man, he just keeps talking.
He was just like, yeah, that happens all the time now.
We're used to it.
You know, we also went down to a town on the Mediterranean, a town called Nahariya.
It hasn't been evacuated yet, but just yesterday, several rockets or drones were fired towards it.
And as far as we know, most of those were intercepted.
You know, Israel shoots down about 90% of those up here.
And Israel fires back, causing a lot of destruction on the Lebanese side too.
And I'll also just add, Rob, just a while ago this morning, a siren went off here in Haifa, and I watched a rocket get shot
down outside my hotel room window. You know, that's unusual for something to be fired this
far south. Yeah, I'm more than 80 miles from the border right now. Well, I mean, it certainly sounds
like the situation there is becoming much more intense. What are Israelis saying needs to be
done about this situation?
Well, people here are anxious for the military to do more.
There have been tens of thousands of people displaced for months now,
and they're eager to go back home.
You know, everyone, every single person I talked to yesterday said they thought a war with Hezbollah was the only option to alleviate the tensions,
even though there's already a war going on in Gaza, like you mentioned.
Here's 58-year-old Sarah Ben-Hamel.
She was back visiting Kirat Shomoneh yesterday.
You know, she told us that she thinks war, not diplomacy,
is the only way people in the town will feel safe to come back.
I know that sounds a little counterintuitive,
but a lot of people here remember the 2006 war against Hezbollah.
It was a horrible war, but there was relative calm afterwards.
And that's what many here think would be the outcome if another Hezbollah. It was a horrible war, but there was relative calm afterwards.
And that's what many here think would be the outcome if another war were to start.
Meanwhile, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and several military officials have made it clear that they are preparing for a war in the north, that they're ready.
And the government recently raised the number of reservists the military can call up specifically for that purpose.
Well, so Secretary of State Antony Blinken is in your region today trying to bring an end to the eight-month conflict in Gaza.
Are there signs that he's having any success there?
Well, you know, there are some, but a lot remains to be seen.
Talks about possible peace talks have been dragging on for weeks.
Yesterday, Blinken met with Netanyahu and reiterated afterwards that the U.S. and other
countries are behind President Biden's three-step plan to end the war in Gaza. You know, this is the plan that Biden announced
a few weeks ago and referred to as the, quote, Israeli plan, although I should note Israel has
not agreed to it, and neither has Hamas. You know, meanwhile, yesterday, the U.N. Security Council
passed a resolution backing the deal. And the feeling here is that a breakthrough in a ceasefire
of some kind in the Gaza war would almost certainly ease the tensions up here. Hezbollah started firing at Israel when the Gaza war began, and what they said was
solidarity with Hamas. That's NPR's Kat Lanzdorf reporting from Haifa in northern Israel. Thanks,
Kat, and stay safe. Thanks so much, Rob. The largest Protestant group in the U.S. starts its annual convention today,
and it's expected to affirm its ban on women clergy.
We're talking about the Southern Baptists.
They're meeting in Indianapolis this week.
Other items on the agenda include a resolution opposing in vitro fertilization
and revisiting how the group deals with clergy sex
abuse. Joining us to preview the meeting is NPR religion correspondent Jason DeRose. Hey, Jason.
Good morning.
So let's start with women clergy. Didn't they already vote to ban female pastors?
They did. They passed that ban last year, but it has to pass two years in a row to become policy.
Albert Moeller is the president of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. He says this vote is about clarity, since a few congregations still give the
title pastor to women. Some churches are, quite honestly, straightforwardly telling us that they
are basically out of sync with the Southern Baptist Convention on the issue of women preaching
and women holding a pastoral office. Moeller argues the Bible prohibits women clergy. The measure is expected to pass again and
therefore go into effect, so then they'll need to figure out how to enforce it.
They're also taking up in vitro fertilization. What does that resolution say?
It calls on church members to advocate for human life which, quote,
necessarily includes frozen embryonic human beings. Now, you remember earlier this year,
the Alabama Supreme Court used similar language. IVF usually involves creating more embryos than
needed or wanted, so they're either kept frozen or destroyed or used in medical research. And
that's the ethical problem for people who view embryos as life. This resolution also encourages
Southern Baptists to quote, consider adopting frozen
embryos in order to rescue them. I spoke with Erin Defoe Hunter, who teaches Christian ethics
at Fuller Seminary, an evangelical school in Pasadena. She worries moves like this actually
scuttle moral deliberation over IVF. One of the things that this kind of resolution can do is shut down any kind of creative kind of imagining of what it might mean to invite people into a new way of understanding, say, infertility.
For instance, Defoe Hunter would like to see more compassionate pastoral care for infertile couples.
So the Southern Baptist Convention has faced numerous allegations of clergy sex abuse in recent years.
How has the church responded?
Well, they're actually having trouble responding.
The task force charged with creating a database of abusive clergy has issued a report saying it hasn't published the name of even one abusive pastor.
The task force says its efforts have been hampered by a lack of funding, worries over legal liability, and a lack of will among church leaders.
Now remember, in 2022, a third-party investigation detailed numerous instances of Southern Baptist leaders mishandling clergy sex abuse allegations.
And that report, in fact, sparked a federal investigation.
I mean, the church is dealing with all these difficult issues.
So why are these votes important to people outside the
Southern Baptist Convention? This church holds a lot of political sway. House Speaker Mike Johnson
is Southern Baptist. It's a conservative church that influences Republican policy. You know,
there are nearly 13 million Southern Baptists in the U.S. who attend about 50,000 congregations.
And what's happening also illustrates the reality of polarization in the
country. I was recently covering the United Methodist Church. Now that group dramatically
liberalized rules around LGBTQ clergy and same-sex weddings. These two churches, Southern Baptists
and United Methodists, are the first and second largest Protestant groups in the U.S. and they're
examples of deep divides in American public life, including
in religious life. That's NPR religion correspondent Jason DeRose. Thank you, Jason.
You're welcome.
Apple's digital assistant Siri may soon have a lot more to say.
Yes, Siri is now getting revamped with ChatGPT, part of a major deal the company announced
yesterday.
NPR's tech correspondent Dara Kerr has been following the news and is here to talk about
it.
Good morning, Dara.
Good morning.
So, Dara, tell us about what Apple has announced.
So, every year, Apple has this big developer conference, and mostly it's for tech insiders.
But a lot of people were watching yesterday.
And that's because it was rumored that Apple was going to announce a partnership with OpenAI,
the company that makes ChatGPT.
And at the very end of its nearly two-hour-long keynote, that announcement came.
And we're starting out with the best of these, the pioneer and market leader, ChatGPT.
And I think people know why that's
significant, but I'd like you to tell us why is that significant? What difference will this make
for, say, the average iPhone user? Yeah, so with Siri now, you can ask it questions and it'll point
you where to find answers on the web. But when it gets integrated with ChatGPT, we'll have OpenAI's technology and be able to scrape the web and form its own answers.
So if you ask it something like how to make a Philly cheesesteak, it will search recipes all over the web and come back with its own ingredient list and cooking instructions.
And like ChatGPT, Siri will also be able to compose essays or stories.
Here's how Apple software chief Craig
Federighi explains it. Suppose you want to create a custom bedtime story for your six-year-old who
loves butterflies and solving riddles. Put in your initial idea and send it to ChatGPT to get
something back she'll love. Hmm, I think the jury's out on how many six-year-olds would love a chat GBT-inspired story, but it seems like we are hearing about the evolution of AI every day.
Has Apple been under the gun to compete?
Yeah, Apple definitely has been feeling the pressure.
Other major tech companies like Google, Facebook, and Microsoft have already rolled out AI tools.
But I should say it hasn't necessarily been smooth
sailing for all of these companies. For instance, just last week, Google announced it was pulling
back on its new AI-assisted search tool. And that's because within hours of its debut,
the tool is giving people all sorts of wacky and possibly dangerous answers. Like it told people
adding glue to pizza would keep the cheese from sliding off
and that eating a small rock every day was healthy.
A small rock?
Yes, very healthy.
And, you know, ChatGPT itself has also been accused of all sorts of things,
including plagiarism, copyright infringement.
It's made things up and has given incorrect and biased answers.
So once Siri gets ChatGPT, and if it starts to do that, it could be really risky for Apple.
Yeah, it sounds like it. I mean, so is Apple basically outsourcing its AI development to this
company?
No, not completely. It also announced its own batch of AI-centric tools yesterday.
It's grouping all of this in what the company calls Apple Intelligence.
But these are tools that will be familiar to us because we've seen them in other companies' products.
There's things like writing tools that can draft emails and letters or essays to your six-year-old.
There's also an image tool that lets people create things like animated avatars and emojis.
So basically, what we're seeing is nothing really new,
but it's the first time we've seen Apple really take a hold of AI.
And why this is significant is that millions of people own Apple's iPhone and its other products.
So essentially, the company will be bringing ChatGPT and its other AI tools to a huge new group of people.
Trying to turn artificial intelligence into Apple intelligence.
NPR tech correspondent, Derek Kerr, thank you.
Thank you so much.
And that's Up First for Tuesday, June 11th. I'm Rob Schmitz.
And I'm Michelle Martin.
For your next listen, check out NPR's Consider This podcast.
On the latest episode, our colleague Mary Louise Kelly digs into how this week's events in Gaza
and the resignation of Israeli War Cabinet Minister Benny Gantz
impacts U.S. efforts to broker a ceasefire deal. Listen to Consider This.
Today's episode of Up First was edited by Hannah Block, Cheryl Corley, Gabriel Spitzer,
Mohamed El-Bardisi, and Alice Wolfley.
It was produced by Ziad Butch, Ben Abrams, Christopher Thomas, and Julie Davenbrock.
We get engineering support from Carly Strange. Our technical director is Zach Coleman.
Join us again tomorrow.